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  • Sommerer, Christa and Laurent Mignonneau. Phototropy II In Zeichenbau - Real Virtualities, edited by Manfred Wolff-PlotteggWien: Gesellschaft bildender Künstler and Künstlerhaus Wien, 1999.
  • 10. Gaia E VIII, 1995. Paper Size: 30" by 22" Pen plotter drawing. Familial Resemblance. The software procedure generates a "family" of forms with a strong familial resemblance. These works resemble each other because they were created
  • "Seismoscope 2: Abu Hamid Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Ghazali", 2009 Persian (1058-1111), author of "The Incoherence of Philosophers" 16.1" x 17.7" x 6.7" / 41 x 45 x 17 cm, XY Plotter 45.2" x 16.1" x 17.7" / 115 x 41 x 45 cm podium 11" x 17" / 28
  • Portrait on the Fly – Plotter Drawings Plotter Drawings made with a Pen Plotter Printer ©2015, Laurent Mignonneau and Christa Sommerer represented by: DAM Galerie Berlin, Galerie Charlot Paris Galerie Anita Beckers Portrait on the Fly also exists
  • THE MANCHESTER ILLUMINATED UNIVERSAL TURING MACHINE by Roman Verostko, 1998 The Project: A family of algorithmic pen plotted drawings, each presented with the binary text for a Universal Turing Machine (UTM), was created for an exhibition in
  • THE MANCHESTER ILLUMINATED UNIVERSAL TURING MACHINE by Roman Verostko, 1998 The Project: A family of algorithmic pen plotted drawings, each presented with the binary text for a Universal Turing Machine (UTM), was created for an exhibition in
  • THE MANCHESTER ILLUMINATED UNIVERSAL TURING MACHINE by Roman Verostko, 1998 The Project: A family of algorithmic pen plotted drawings, each presented with the binary text for a Universal Turing Machine (UTM), was created for an exhibition in
  • THE MANCHESTER ILLUMINATED UNIVERSAL TURING MACHINE by Roman Verostko, 1998 The Project: A family of algorithmic pen plotted drawings, each presented with the binary text for a Universal Turing Machine (UTM), was created for an exhibition in
  • "Roman Verostko, a founding member of the algorists, has practiced drawing and painting since graduating from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh in 1949. Reflecting on well over a half century of his work he sees continuity between drawing with his
  • ncisively political and profoundly poetic, William Kentridge's protean artistic investigation continues in his beautiful series of tapestries begun in 2001. The tapestries stem from a series of drawings in which he conjured shadowy figures from